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 reflects Hawaii’s unique geographic constraints and limited housing supply. Newark, New Jersey ($660,000 median, $176,470 gap) shows that even northern metro areas face considerable challenges. New York City demonstrates surprising relative affordability compared to West Coast markets, with a median price of $725,300 and a smaller gap of $37,290—suggesting that even the nation’s financial capital has modestly more accessible entry points for upper-middle-class buyers.
Miami ($643,900 median, $27,246 gap) and Scottsdale ($1,178,000 median, $225,117 gap) round out the non-California entries, each representing regional wealth centers where upper-middle-class earners find themselves priced at the margins of feasibility.
Why These Markets Remain Unaffordable for Upper-Middle-Class Homebuyers
The concentration of California cities reflects broader trends in tech-sector wealth accumulation, foreign investment, and limited housing supply in desirable coastal markets. These factors have driven median prices to levels that fundamentally outpace even substantial upper-middle-class incomes.
The affordability gap represents the difference between what upper-middle-class earners can financially access (typically calculated at 4-5 times annual income) and what properties actually cost. In San Jose, this gap exceeds three-quarters of a million dollars. Even in Miami, where the gap appears smallest at $27,246, upper-middle-class buyers operate with virtually no financial cushion.
Key Takeaway for Upper-Middle-Class Home Seekers
The reality that 15 major American cities have become completely unaffordable even for upper-middle-class house purchases reflects unprecedented strain in housing markets. These findings underscore that income level alone no longer guarantees residential access in America’s most desirable locations. Upper-middle-class families considering homeownership in these markets may need to look beyond traditional financing or consider alternative markets where their earnings translate to meaningful purchasing power.